WASHINGTON — House Ethics Committee Republicans voted Wednesday against releasing the panel's long-running investigation into President-elect Donald Trump's nominee for attorney general, former Rep. Matt Gaetz, the top Democrat on the panel said.
The outcome, however, is only a temporary reprieve for Gaetz, who faces allegations of sexual misconduct, as he works to personally secure his embattled nomination to be the nation's top law enforcement official.
The House panel expects to meet again Dec. 5 to reconsider releasing its findings.
"There was no consensus on this issue," said Rep. Susan Wild of Pennsylvania, the panel's ranking Democrat, who said the vote fell along party lines on the evenly split committee.
The standoff comes as Trump and Gaetz are digging in for a potentially lengthy, brutal confirmation fight ahead. Gaetz met privately for hours Wednesday with Republican senators who have heard questions about the allegations and will be considering their votes on his nomination.
Trump has in Gaetz a valued ally who is bringing wide-ranging proposals to rid the Department of Justice of those perceived to have ''weaponized'' their work against the president-elect, his allies and conservatives in general.
At least one Republican senator decried the scrutiny as a ''lynch mob'' forming against Gaetz.
''I'm not going to legitimize the process to destroy the man because people don't like his politics,'' said Sen. Lindsey Graham, R-S.C., as he left the private senators' meeting.